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- Title
Facies mosaic and diagenetic patterns of the early Devonian (Late Pragian-Early Emsian) microbialite-dominated carbonate sequences, Qasr Member, Jauf Formation, Saudi Arabia.
- Authors
Koeshidayatullah, Ardiansyah; Al‐Ramadan, Khalid; Hughes, Geraint Wyn
- Abstract
The Al-Jawf area of northern Saudi Arabia provides spectacular outcrops of Early Devonian carbonate bioherms in the Wadi Murayr and Dumat Al-Jandal areas. These carbonate bioherms belong to the Qasr Member of the Late Pragian-Early Emsian Jauf Formation (~405 Ma) and are surrounded by a bioclastic carbonate succession. The Qasr Member is the first major carbonate unit of the Palaeozoic succession in Saudi Arabia that mainly consists of microbialite carbonates and metazoan reefs exhibiting distinct mound features. These bioherm complexes and their associated carbonate facies are pervasively dolomitized. Stratigraphic, petrographic and geochemical analyses were conducted to determine the facies distribution and interpret their depositional and diagenetic processes. A total of 11 facies are identified from a range of depositional environments within a carbonate platform system, ranging from tidal flats, lagoon, shoal, patch reefs to reef front. The main diagenetic processes are carbonate cementation and dolomitization. Dolomitization occurred as both fabric preserved (mostly in grain-dominated facies) and fabric destructive (mud-dominated facies). The microbialites and coralline sponges facies show poor reservoir with visual porosity less than 5%, but this succession may have a potential to serve as a good source for the underlying and overlying facies. Ooid and peloidal grainstone facies show fair to good visual porosity that locally exceeds 10% with intergranular porosity as the dominant type. However, in the most studied samples, vuggy and intraparticle porosities are observed as the dominant type.
- Subjects
SAUDI Arabia; CARBONATE minerals; DEVONIAN stratigraphic geology; BIOHERMS; GEOLOGICAL formations; GEOCHEMISTRY; ROCK-forming minerals
- Publication
Geological Journal, 2016, Vol 51, Issue 5, p704
- ISSN
0072-1050
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/gj.2678